Example sentences of "[adv] be [vb pp] in [adj] " in BNC.

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31 These can only be discriminated in thin sections viewed under the microscope after they have been exposed to appropriate dyes .
32 Indeed , according to Devereux , such is the state of our cultural orthodoxy that the consciousness field of the Earth , if that is what , at root , this subtle energy is , can really only be experienced in altered states .
33 Michael Feist Countryside special sites could be in open countryside away from Government policies concerning sustainability , I wonder how Professor Lock would see the situation emerging whereby a local authority has allocated a certain amount of land in its local plan for development for industrial or commercial purposes , it 's tried to erm identify a broad range of criteria but it also identified special sites erm which will only be released in exceptional circumstances , that happened to be an open countryside and had the advantages that it may be a little close to the A one or somewhere similar .
34 Federal law on insider dealing has become so well developed that recourse to common law remedies need only be had in exceptional circumstances .
35 The real secret of masonry had been lost , he wrote , and could now only be found in other organisations faithful to the Ancient Mysteries .
36 Healthy and happy Koi will only be found in perfect water conditions .
37 Through the eyes of bishops we can catch an occasional glimpse of little groups of them ; but with the conversion of the Franks from c .500 and of the English from c .600 onwards , they could only be found in large numbers on the fringes of Western Christendom and in the outer darkness beyond .
38 In fact , it is unsafe to assume that the intensity of direct competition between males should necessarily be reduced in monogamous species .
39 Well the plain fact of the matter was Chairman there were there were none to quote to him and erm we see the the structure plan Policy E two er as fulfilling a bridging role between national policy and the more specific guidance which would necessarily be contained in local plans .
40 For example in the layout of a letter , different dictionaries should perhaps be accessed in different parts of the letter .
41 He may soon be caught in other local-government traps
42 A new calculation will soon be published in Physical Review Letters by Levan Surguladzo , also of the Institute for Nuclear Research , and Mark Samuel of Oklahoma State University .
43 In any case , such approaches could scarcely be adopted in existing residential areas , because of high cost , the unsuitable arrangements of roads , or lack of space .
44 This does not mean that his investment proposals need no longer be quantified in financial DCF terms .
45 In his younger days his acquaintance with the anarchist Prince Peter Kropotkin had suggested to him that the fundamental principles of social order ( for Radcliffe-Brown , the ‘ structure ’ and ‘ function ’ of social institutions ) might best be discerned in simple self-regulating communities without formalized governmental authority .
46 Many firms feel that these requirements can best be found in external rather than internal sources .
47 Roots may just be retained in small market towns like Grantham , Selby and Chipping Norton , in spite of the tourists .
48 A guardian ad litem can not generally be appointed in private law proceedings even if they involve a local authority .
49 The regularities which the discourse analyst describes will normally be expressed in dynamic , not static , terms .
50 Entities will normally be displayed in small capitals .
51 The objects clause of a memorandum of association will normally be drafted in broad terms to enable the directors to have scope to manage the company as they see fit .
52 We shall shortly see that pragmatism is less radical than this description makes it seem , for it recognizes reasons of strategy why statutes should generally be enforced in accordance with their plain and intended meaning and why past judicial decisions should normally be respected in present cases .
53 It also reaffirmed , with greater emphasis than the 1944 Act , the principle that children with special educational needs should normally be educated in ordinary schools provided that their needs can be met there , that the education of the other children does not suffer , and that it is compatible with the ‘ efficient use of resources ’ .
54 Poizner ( 1979 ) infers that spatial processing dominates in sign perception even though these lexical items may normally be experienced in temporal sequences , just as in spoken language .
55 It was recognised by the defendants that when the employment of an agent came to an end it was likely that there would be in existence a number of policies which would have been effected during the period of the plaintiff 's employment in respect of which commission would normally be paid in future years if the employment had continued .
56 ( TV 5 could already be received in western Europe , north America and the Caribbean ) .
57 At the moment , trade marks may be registered in individual countries but there are moves to develop an integrated European system although this will present difficulties as the same or similar marks may already be registered in different countries by different proprietors .
58 It produces data that can easily be expressed in statistical form .
59 However , a colleague looking at these OSUs in relation to their cultural impact , saw there were many aspects of a qualitative nature which could not easily be expressed in fiscal terms ( Adams 1988 : 11 ) :
60 Such members can quite easily be made in curved shapes and a not uncommon obstruction on the roads of England is a lorry carrying vast timber arches for some architectural project .
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